Participate is co-convened by the Institute of Development Studies and Beyond 2015, but the initiative is only possible because of the energy, expertise and vision of numerous organisations committed to participatory research. Participate is funded by the UK Government. For more information contact participate@ids.ac.uk

The Participate team is providing regular updates through Twitter using these hashtags: #post2015; #beyond2015; #post2015HLP and #worldwewant. Follow the debates live on our Twitter and Facebook profiles: @participate2015, @workwithus2015 and Facebook.com/workwithus2015

Reviewing lessons from large-scale consultation processes

Previous global consultations
have been experienced by many as ‘extractive’ – with poor people feeling that
their voice has been used for political ends which are not their own. There are
considerable lessons to be learned about what to do, and what not to do, if the
future of development is to be ‘owned’ by those who are most affected by it.

Facilitating a global Participatory Research Group (PRG)

Current participatory research projects gathering knowledge from the margins on the post-2015 debate are brought together through the PRG. This group has been supported through methodological workshops for reflection and innovation, including participatory visual work and documentation of the processes involved. Read more information on the PRG Members or view a map.

Analysing and synthesising recent and current participatory studies

Two analyses have been carried out: the first was of recent participatory studies that pertain to the MDGs; the second was all of all of the current participatory work carried out by the PRG. Both the synthesises were conducted in an iterative way, with findings translated into a series of comprehensive research outputs and key policy messages for decision makers, while retaining their legitimacy with the people who produced them.

Creating a Ground Level Panel (GLP) to mirror the work of the High
Level Panel (HLP)

Participate worked with four PRG partners in Brazil, India, Egypt and Uganda to organise GLPs to deliberate on the future of development and produce its own recommendations.
Among others, the participants included dwellers of city slums, pastoralists who walk with cattle across bush lands in search of water, refugees from war, and small farmers whose crops have failed in response to climate change.

Putting cameras in the hands of the poorest to make their own films that tell their own stories

Participatory visual processes can reveal and communicate powerfully about experiences from the margins. Six participatory visual processes were supported and facilitated to provide contextualised examples of the complex and nuanced understanding of the subjective aspects and consequences of development. In parallel, a documentary film, Work with us: Community-driven research inspiring change, has brought together learning on the key themes that surface, and how such processes can re-position ground level perspectives for open dialogue with policy-makers.

Building partnerships with NGOs and other agencies doing research
in the poorest communities

With an emphasis on engaging marginal communities directly, this initiative is distinct from
efforts to engage civil society organisations in the post-2015 debate. However,
this work provides a valuable means of triangulating and verifying evidence
from both sources, and we will partnerships with relevant NGO and CSO led
advocacy efforts to multiply impact where possible.

Related Events

The Participate blog aims to champion participatory research and share the many innovative ways in which the Participate initiative is trying to bring knowledge from the margins into the post-2015 debates. It is written by members of the Participate team, the Participatory Research Group, and other experts.